Modulating amyloids’ formation path with sound energy

Author:

Kozell Anna1ORCID,Eliaz Dror1,Solomonov Aleksei1ORCID,Benyamin Doron2,Shmul Guy3ORCID,Brookstein Ori1,Rosenhek-Goldian Irit3,Raviv Uri2ORCID,Shimanovich Ulyana1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Molecular Chemistry and Materials Science, Faculty of Chemistry, Weizmann Institute of Science, 76100 Rehovot, Israel

2. Institute of Chemistry, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem 9190401, Israel

3. Department of Chemical Research Support, Weizmann Institute of Science, 76100 Rehovot, Israel

Abstract

Protein folding is crucial for biological activity. Proteins’ failure to fold correctly underlies various pathological processes, including amyloidosis, the aggregation of insoluble proteins (e.g., lysozymes) in organs. The exact conditions that trigger the structural transition of amyloids into β-sheet-rich aggregates are poorly understood, as is the case for the amyloidogenic self-assembly pathway. Ultrasound is routinely used to destabilize a protein’s structure and enhance amyloid growth. Here, we report on an unexpected ultrasound effect on lysozyme amyloid species at different stages of aggregation: ultrasound-induced structural perturbation gives rise to nonamyloidogenic folds. Our infrared and X-ray analyses of the chemical, mechanical, and thermal effects of sound on lysozyme’s structure found, in addition to the expected ultrasound-induced damage, evidence of irreversible disruption of the β-sheet fold of fibrillar lysozyme resulting in their structural transformation into monomers with no β-sheets. This structural transition is reflected in changes in the kinetics of protein self-assembly, namely, either prolonged nucleation or accelerated fibril growth. Using solution X-ray scattering, we determined the structure, the mass fraction of lysozyme monomer, and the morphology of its filamentous assemblies formed under different sound parameters. A nanomechanical analysis of ultrasound-modified protein assemblies revealed a correlation between the β-sheet content and elastic modulus of the protein material. Suppressing one of the ultrasound-derived effects allowed us to control the structural transformations of lysozyme. Overall, our comprehensive investigation establishes the boundary conditions under which ultrasound damages protein structure and fold. This knowledge can be utilized to impose medically desirable structural modifications on amyloid β-sheet-rich proteins.

Funder

Nella and Leon Benoziyo Center for Neurological Diseases, Weizmann Institute of Science

Perlman family for funding the Shimanovich Lab

Anita James Rosen Foundation

SAERI Foundation

GMJ Schmidt Minerva Centre of Supramolecular Architectures at the Weizmann Institute

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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